76 S.W.2d 639 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1934
Reversing.
In this suit by the appellee against the appellant to recover on a group insurance policy issued by the appellant to the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company to protect its employees against accidents and disabilities, the appellee recovered the full amount for which he sued. From that judgment, this appeal is prosecuted.
The appellee entered the employ of the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company, hereinafter called the railroad company, as a boiler maker in its shops at Corbin, Ky., on May 8, 1924, and was continuously so employed up until December 8, 1931. During this period, the railroad company effected with the appellant group insurance for its employees and the appellee electing to come within such insurance plan signed an authorization card and received his individual certificate. The group policy provided, among other things, as follows:
"If the said employee, while less than sixty years of age, and while the insurance on the life of said employee under said policy is in full force and effect, shall become totally and permanently disabled or physically or mentally incapacitated to such an extent that he or she by reason of such disability or incapacity is rendered wholly, continuously and permanently unable to perform any work for any kind of compensation of financial value during the remainder of his or her lifetime, the amount of insurance payable at death from natural causes will be paid to said employee in monthly installments *577 during two years, the first installment to be payable immediately upon receipt by the Company of due proof of such disability or incapacity; in accordance with the provisions of said Policy. The disability benefits will be granted subject to cessation, in accordance with the provisions of the Policy, should such disability or incapacity prove to be temporary and not permanent. * * *"
It is the contention of the appellant that on December 8, 1931, the appellee was discharged by the railroad company on account of slackness of work. On the other hand, it is the contention of the appellee that he was not discharged, but due to the slackness of work he was temporarily laid off and put upon what is known as the extra board, and that he was the first man upon this board which means that whenever any more help was needed than was being used to take care of what business the shops of the railroad company then had at Corbin, the appellee would be called. Appellee further contends that he continued on this extra board until May, 1933, when he was for the first time called back to work, but that before being put back to labor he was required by the railroad to take a medical examination which disclosed the fact that he was totally and permanently disabled, that on this discovery the railroad company declined to employ him further. It is in evidence that the appellee while working at the shops received injuries in the spring of 1931, and again in the fall of that year, and that these injuries are the cause of his present physical condition. It is his contention that although he did work as a boiler maker up until December 8, 1931, he had had great difficulty in doing so, and that as a matter of fact when he was laid off on December 8, 1931, he would not, as his medical testimony now indicates, have been able to have continued at his work but a few days more, and that his total and permanent disability in fact dates from the month of December, 1931. The evidence shows that on January 1, 1932, the railroad company and the insurance company changed, as they had a right to do, their group insurance plan, and that beginning with January 1, 1932, the provision for total and permanent disability was eliminated from the group insurance. The parties introduced evidence to sustain their respective contentions. There is no contradiction of the medical testimony to the effect that appellee is now totally and permanently *578 disabled, and that in the opinion of the doctors this condition existed in December, 1931.
As grounds for reversal, appellant argues that it was entitled to a peremptory instruction, first, on the ground that during the time appellant was employed he was not totally and permanently disabled because in fact and in truth he did work up to and including December 8, 1931, when he was discharged. However, it must not be forgotten that appellee contends that he was not discharged on December 8th, but only temporarily laid off, and that his name was placed on the extra board. As held in the case of Prudential Ins. Co. of America v. Sweet,
Appellee made no claim under his insurance policy to the appellant until May, 1933, and it is contended by it that due to this delay the appellee is barred by his laches. Laches is not simply delay but delay that works injury. Trimble v. Kentucky River Coal Corp.,